In 2008, the then-mayor of St. Louis
was invited to speak at the annual MLK celebration. He was booed so
loudly that he couldn’t continue his remarks. Francis Slay, a
Democrat, had done a stream of racially divisive actions while in
office but the straw the broke the proverbial camel’s back was
the unjustified firing of the first African American fire chief,
Sherman George. We hoped that our planned action to shut the mayor
down would be duplicated in other cities. After all, the boo crew’s
action made national news.
January
is the time of the year that Dr. King’s speech permeates the
air. “I Have a Dream” is often quoted—even by the
perpetrators of greed, racism and injustice. If half of us were truly
carrying out the principles of Dr. King, the world wouldn’t be
such a ball of confusion.
It’s
2019.
The
president and his vice president had the audacity to lay a wreath at
the Martin Luther King Jr. memorial on the National Mall in
Washington. It was an impromptu visit and trump had the good sense
not to utter Dr. King’s name. I don’t want us to leave
the month of January without a serious promise to stop giving such
perpetrators any opportunity to claim support or advancement of the
King legacy.
Apparently
Republican U.S. Sen. David Perdue was invited to speak at the King
Celebration in Atlanta. WT? The trump administration had put 800,000
workers and their families in crises. What does this and all the
other inhumane policies and actions by trump have to do with the
commitment to the Dream.
The
brilliance and complexity of Dr. King’s work is his enduring
analysis of this country’s three evils: racism, war and
poverty. Over five decades since his death, these three evils are
alive and well and continually stoked by the likes of trump. Dreaming
won’t rid us of them either.
Billions
of tax dollars are spent each year in military aggression, both home
and abroad. One in six Americans now lives below the poverty line.
The unemployment rate for black people has been doubled that of
whites since 1972. Poverty and economic injustice are twins that
still dominate. The big tax cut by trump no way eased the deep
suffering of poor and working people.
King
had many profound insights about life in the U.S. that can still
inform our quest for racial and economic justice. Because the
mainstream media has us stuck on dreaming, it has taken years to
uncover the nuggets of wisdom in King’s many speeches and
writings that expose the barriers to peace and prosperity for all
American citizens.
Regarding
the attack on the public schools, Dr. King believed that “the
function of education is to teach one to think intensively and to
think critically.” Many of our children going to public schools
are being robbed of a true education and ultimately, their future.
The
growing economic gap between the rich and poor is becoming an
acceptable fact. Dr. King would have found it unconscionable
believing “the curse of poverty has no justification in our
age” and that the “the time has come for us to civilize
ourselves by the total, direct and immediate abolition of poverty.”
To know that a CEO makes 270 times more than the average worker would
sicken the King.
On
police brutality and the criminal courts, Dr. King said that “law
and order exist for the purpose of establishing justice and when they
fail in this purpose, they become the dangerously structured dams
that block the flow of social progress.” He would be critical
of any police department that persists in racial profiling and a
prosecuting’s office which has difficulty figuring out who are
the real criminals.
On
war and US imperialism, Dr. King was on point when he predicted that
“a nation that continues year after year to spend more money on
military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching
spiritual doom.”
Dr.
King reminded us that “of all the forms of inequality,
injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane.” He
would be appalled to see that the richest country in the world had 45
million uninsured citizens despite the efforts of the first Black
president to provide health care for all.
If
we truly honor the sacrifices of Dr. King, it’s time out for us
making space or accommodating those working against the interests of
humanity. Trust and believe Dr. King when he said full civil and
human rights will not come at “bargain rates.”
|